Fields can take arguments as input. These can be used to determine the return value (eg, filtering search results) or to modify the application state (eg, updating the database in MutationType).
Arguments are defined with the argument helper. These arguments are passed as keyword arguments to the resolver method:
field :search_posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :category, String end def search_posts(category:) Post.where(category: category).limit(10) end To make an argument optional, set required: false, and set default values for the corresponding keyword arguments:
field :search_posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :category, String, required: false end def search_posts(category: nil) if category Post.where(category: category).limit(10) else Post.all.limit(10) end end Be aware that if all arguments are optional and the query does not provide any arguments, then the resolver method will be called with no arguments. To prevent an ArgumentError in this case, you must either specify default values for all keyword arguments (as done in the prior example) or use the double splat operator argument in the method definition. For example:
def search_posts(**args) if args[:category] Post.where(category: args[:category]).limit(10) else Post.all.limit(10) end end Another approach is to use default_value: value to provide a default value for the argument if it is not supplied in the query.
field :search_posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :category, String, required: false, default_value: "Programming" end def search_posts(category:) Post.where(category: category).limit(10) end Arguments with required: false do accept null as inputs from clients. This can be surprising in resolver code, for example, an argument with Integer, required: false can sometimes be nil. In this case, you can use replace_null_with_default: true to apply the given default_value: ... when clients provide null. For example:
# Even if clients send `query: null`, the resolver will receive `"*"` for this argument: argument :query, String, required: false, default_value: "*", replace_null_with_default: true Finally, required: :nullable will require clients to pass the argument, although it will accept null as a valid input. For example:
# This argument _must_ be given -- send `null` if there's no other appropriate value: argument :email_address, String, required: :nullable Experimental: Deprecated arguments can be marked by adding a deprecation_reason: keyword argument:
field :search_posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :name, String, required: false, deprecation_reason: "Use `query` instead." argument :query, String, required: false end Use as: :alternate_name to use a different key from within your resolvers while exposing another key to clients.
field :post, PostType, null: false do argument :post_id, ID, as: :id end def post(id:) Post.find(id) end Provide a prepare function to modify or validate the value of an argument before the field’s resolver method is executed:
field :posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :start_date, String, prepare: ->(startDate, ctx) { # return the prepared argument. # raise a GraphQL::ExecutionError to halt the execution of the field and # add the exception's message to the `errors` key. } end def posts(start_date:) # use prepared start_date end Arguments that are snake_cased will be camelized in the GraphQL schema. Using the example of:
field :posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :start_year, Int end The corresponding GraphQL query will look like:
{ posts(startYear: 2018) { id } } To disable auto-camelization, pass camelize: false to the argument method.
field :posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :start_year, Int, camelize: false end Furthermore, if your argument is already camelCased, then it will remain camelized in the GraphQL schema. However, the argument will be converted to snake_case when it is passed to the resolver method:
field :posts, [PostType], null: false do argument :startYear, Int end def posts(start_year:) # ... end Only certain types are valid for arguments:
GraphQL::Schema::Scalar, including built-in scalars (string, int, float, boolean, ID)GraphQL::Schema::EnumGraphQL::Schema::InputObject, which allows key-value pairs as inputGraphQL::Schema::Lists of a valid input type, configured using [...]GraphQL::Schema::NonNulls of a valid input type (arguments are non-null by default; use required: false to make optional arguments)